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SC Allows Centre to Reconsider AGR Demand From Vodafone

New Delhi, 27 October 2025: The Supreme Court on Monday allowed the Union government to reconsider and reconcile an additional Adjusted Gross Revenue (AGR) demand of ₹5,606 crore raised against Vodafone Idea for the 2016–17 period. A bench led by Chief Justice of India B.R. Gavai and Justice K. Vinod Chandran took note of the government’s changed position after it infused equity into the company and said the issue may be examined in light of broader public interest.
Bench cites changed circumstancesThe bench recorded that Solicitor General Tushar Mehta had informed the court the Union was willing to re-examine the reassessment raised by Vodafone India. The government’s decision followed its recent infusion of 49% equity into the company and the argument that roughly 20 crore customers now depend on Vodafone Idea’s services.

“Taking into consideration the status of the case now, the government has infused substantial equity into the company, and further, that the issue involved is likely to have a direct bearing on the interests of 20 crores customers, we see no issue in the Union reconsidering the issue and taking an appropriate decision,” the order states.

What Vodafone argued

Vodafone India represented by senior advocate Mukul Rohatgi challenged the Department of Telecommunications’ (DoT) fresh demand for AGR dues relating to 2016–17. The company argued the liabilities had been crystallised by the Supreme Court’s 2019 judgment and could not be reopened with an additional demand for the same period.

Vodafone’s petition sought a writ quashing the new notices and asked the DoT to comprehensively reassess and reconcile all dues up to FY 2016–17.

Legal background: the 2019 AGR judgment

The AGR litigation reached a turning point in October 2019 when the Supreme Court upheld the DoT’s broad definition of Adjusted Gross Revenue, a ruling that expanded the revenue base for licence fees and spectrum usage charges. The judgment exposed telecom operators to large retrospective liabilities running into over ₹1.4 lakh crore, including penalties and interest.

Review and modification petitions by telecom companies were dismissed by the Court in early 2020. Subsequently, in September 2020, the Court permitted a phased 10-year timeline for payment of the dues  a measure intended to ease the financial burden on operators. Vodafone Idea has long argued that the liabilities crystallised by those orders cannot be re-opened arbitrarily.

What the court made clear

The Supreme Court expressly qualified its order: it granted the Union the space to reconsider the demand only in the “peculiar facts and circumstances” of this case. The court emphasised that the subject falls within the policy domain of the Union and the current direction is driven by changed circumstances, not a revision of legal precedent.

“We clarify that the order is passed only in the peculiar facts and circumstances of the case,” the bench said, signalling that this discretion should not be read as a fresh legal reopening of the AGR jurisprudence.

Sector implications

The judgement has immediate commercial and regulatory implications. Vodafone Idea remains under severe financial stress and government equity support was seen as necessary to keep the operator afloat and preserve telecom competition. Any reconciliation by the DoT could materially alter the company’s near-term liabilities.

Telecom stakeholders will watch closely: a negotiated outcome may stabilise Vodafone Idea, protect subscriber continuity and limit systemic shocks to the telecom ecosystem. At the same time, clarity is essential for other operators and for DoT’s revenue accounting.

What next?

The Union has been permitted to examine and take an appropriate decision. The scope, timeline and process for such reassessment rest with the government. Observers expect detailed internal reconciliation between DoT records and Vodafone Idea’s accounts, and possible consultations with legal and financial advisers before any final order.

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